Stingray stabbed Crocodile Hunter Steven Irwin “hundreds of times”

For the first time, Steve Irwin’s cameraman described the death of the television icon, who rose to prominence blending a childlike ebullience with an incredible brazenness in handling the planet’s most dangerous creatures.

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For the first time, Steve Irwin’s cameraman described the death of the television icon, who rose to prominence blending a childlike ebullience with an incredible brazenness in handling the planet’s most dangerous creatures.

June 19, 2003Steve Irwin, recognized worldwide as the Crocodile Hunter, holds a model train at a Sydney launch for a new train service. The cameraman who witnessed Irwin’s death revealed on March 10 that a stingray stabbed him “hundreds of times” and that his final words were “I'm dying.”Greg Wood/AFP/Getty Images

For the first time, Steven Irwin’s cameraman described on Sunday the death of the television icon, who rose to prominence blending a childlike ebullience with a incredible brazenness in handling the planet’s most dangerous creatures.

On September 4, 2006, Irwin and his cameraman, Justin Lyons sank into the waters soaking the Great Barrier Reef near Queensland, Australia. They had been in the area filming a series called Ocean’s Deadliest, when what Lyons described in an interview with Australia’s Studio 10 as a “massive” stingray approached Irwin.

Lyons then watched as the stingray stabbed Irwin “hundreds of times.”

“I panned with the camera as the stingray swam away and I didn’t know it had caused any damage,” he said. “It was only when I panned the camera back that I saw Steve standing in a huge pool of blood.”

Lyons said reports at the time that Irwin had removed the stingray’s barb from his chest had been inaccurate. “It [was] a jagged barb and it went through his chest like hot butter,” he said.

The Crocodile Hunter was quiet in his last moments. “I was saying to him things like ‘think of your kids Steve, hang on, hang on, hang on,’ ” Lyons recalled. “He calmly looked up at me and said ‘I’m dying.’ And that was the last thing he said.”

The cameraman had caught the carnage on film, but says it should never be aired.